A Ford exec says the company can't build its Lincoln Navigator SUV fast enough — and its success is giving the brand a boost in the most important market in the world (F)
- Lincoln is the luxury brand of Ford, which has been struggling amid a restructuring.
- After nearly being killed off after the financial crisis, Lincoln has recovered — and has scored a big sales hit with its new full-size Navigator SUV.
- Lincoln is led by Joy Falotico, one of the few women running any aspect of the major auto luxury brand.
Ford's problems have been mounting.
The auto giant has struggled over the past two years, as CEO Mark Fields was ousted in 2017 and replaced by Jim Hackett, who is now mired in an $11 billion restructuring of the 119-year-old automaker. The stock has declined 30% in 2018, even as Ford has enjoyed a sales boom for profitable pickup trucks.
Despite its struggles, though, Ford has some bright spots. And its Lincoln brand is one of them.
Lincoln's comeback
Joy Falotico, the group vice president of Lincoln Motor Company and chief marketing officer, is one of just two women who preside over aspects of a major automotive luxury brand, with the other being Aston Martin America's head, Laura Schwab.
Falotico got the job, and the official title of vice president, in March. She had been CEO of Ford's captive financing arm, Ford Motor Company Credit. (She remains the chairwoman of Ford Credit's board.)
Under its former boss Kumar Galhotra — he took over Ford's critical North American operations earlier this year — Lincoln had undergone a huge brand reinvention after the long-standing luxury marque had been threatened with demise in the wake of the financial crisis.
Ford survived and reestablished Lincoln as a competitor to General Motors' Cadillac. The brand still trailed German luxury nameplates such as BMW, Mercedes, and Audi, but with an appealing lineup of crossover SUVs and an offbeat advertising campaign featuring the Oscar-winning actor Matthew McConaughey expressing esoteric profundities, Lincoln was back on the map.
Falotico's arrival coincided with a brilliant bit of strategic good fortune. After debuting a dramatic new Lincoln Navigator concept vehicle at the New York International Auto Show in 2016, Lincoln followed up with a production reveal of the redesigned full-size SUV at the same venue in 2017. The SUV went on sale shortly thereafter.
Navigator has now doubled its 2017 sales figures every month in 2018 and is on track to sell 6,000 to 7,000 more vehicles this year than it did last year. Ford can't build them fast enough.
Lincoln dealers can't get enough Navigators
"Give me more!" Falotico told Business Insider of the dealer reaction. In an interview, she added that inventory had dropped below a 20-days supply, meaning demand for the SUV is off the charts. On top of all that, she said the sales mix was "really rich," with 80% of sales consisting of the Black Label and Reserve trim levels, starting at $94,000 and $82,000 before options.
Falotico said Lincoln was pleased with the new Navigator's market performance, but she noted that the latest generation of the vehicle came after a decade committed to the third iteration of the first true luxury full-size SUV (the Navigator dates to the late 1990s).
"We stopped our investment and were passed by the Cadillac Escalade," she said.
Falotico's next challenge is to build on Navigator's success and, as she put it, "sell the whole lineup."
For Lincoln, that means pressing forward two smaller crossovers, the midsize Nautilus and the compact Aviator. Both will replace older SUVs in Lincoln's portfolio and carry substantial sales burdens as the luxury market moves away from sedans.
For now, the Navigator is leading the charge and, according to Falotico, helping Lincoln to bolster the brand in China, whose auto market is already bigger than that of the US.
Falotico conceded that the full-size hauler occupied a smaller segment in China than in the US. But she pointed out that the SUV functioned as a "halo" vehicle for the brand there and that Chinese customers had responded favorably to it.
For Lincoln, that's welcome.
"China is going to be the largest market, for certain," she said.
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